Plants don't make carbon dioxide, they produce oxygen. Humans and cattle, like all animals, produce carbon dioxide because we need oxygen in our bodies to function properly and live, and in order to do so oxygen gets converted into carbon dioxide which must be excreted or exhaled out of our systems so that more oxygen can be drawn back in.
Cows are ruminants and have an active microbial population in their guts which releases methane. They also release some nitrogen from swallowed air, water vapour, and carbon dioxide.
Cows contribute to increased levels of carbon dioxide by producing methane during digestion, a potent greenhouse gas. This methane is released through belching and manure, contributing to the overall greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change.
Cows contribute to carbon dioxide emissions primarily through their methane production during digestion. Reducing the number of cows means less methane being released into the atmosphere, helping to lower overall greenhouse gas emissions and combat climate change.
Carbon dioxide doesn't form in the Calvin Cycle (I assume you're referring that because there isn't such a thing as the "Calving Cycle" in biochemistry. Carbon dioxide must be taken in by the plant via the stomata and it is then used by the plant in photosynthesis. Clearly, this is why plants rely on carbon dioxide to complete the Calvin cycle and in large, photosynthesis. ~ nkindianhobo ~
Humans and all other animals exhale carbon dioxide, as part of the natural cycle, in which plants absorb the carbon dioxide and give off oxygen. As long as we have enough plants in the form of trees, algae and other vegetaion, this cycle is sustainable with no increase in atmospheric greenhouse gases. Cows and sheep also exhale methane, which is a potent greenhouse gas that is not absorbed by plants. This has been blamed as a significant contributor to global warming.
No, PLANTS release oxygen when they breathe. Cows, like humans, release CARBON DIOXIDE when they exhale.
Just like you the expel a lot of carbon dioxide due to respiration.
Cows release more carbon dioxide when they burp or release flatulence than a car does for a whole month....or something like that.
Green plants are primary producers, many (primary consumers) feed off of them, this passes food energy up the food chain. Grass grows, cows eat grass, cows produce milk and humans eat cows
Plants and animals both feed humans. Plants give us oxygen while absorbing carbon dioxide so can breath. Animals help us do jobs and/or create jobs. For example: police dogs help the police by doing what humans can't; my grandfather is a farmer but he only has cows, so without them he wouldn't have a job.
Yes, but in the form of carbon dioxide, with contains two atoms of oxygen and one of carbon. Cows don't breathe out the pure form of oxygen; they breathe in oxygen as well as nitrogen from the atmosphere.
In a manner of speaking, yes. However the form that oxygen is in is not pure when exhaled: it is bonded with a carbon atom, making the molecule carbon dioxide, which is the product exhaled from the lungs during the process of respiration.
Cows are ruminants and have an active microbial population in their guts which releases methane. They also release some nitrogen from swallowed air, water vapour, and carbon dioxide.
Cows contribute to increased levels of carbon dioxide by producing methane during digestion, a potent greenhouse gas. This methane is released through belching and manure, contributing to the overall greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change.
A cow has 2 lungs, like most mammals, including humans. They are located in the chest cavity and play a vital role in the respiratory system by taking in oxygen and expelling carbon dioxide.
Cows contribute to carbon dioxide emissions primarily through their methane production during digestion. Reducing the number of cows means less methane being released into the atmosphere, helping to lower overall greenhouse gas emissions and combat climate change.
Carbon dioxide doesn't form in the Calvin Cycle (I assume you're referring that because there isn't such a thing as the "Calving Cycle" in biochemistry. Carbon dioxide must be taken in by the plant via the stomata and it is then used by the plant in photosynthesis. Clearly, this is why plants rely on carbon dioxide to complete the Calvin cycle and in large, photosynthesis. ~ nkindianhobo ~